CLARK, Gordon H. More on Morality - The Southern Presbyterian Journal 18

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educational needs hundreds of young people and at the same time have these young people channeled into service within the church, both at home and abroad. This opportunity should prove a challenge to the Trustees when they meet in Montreat in August. The immediate church-wide need for additional workers constitutes one part of this challenge. The fact that candidates for a college education will double in the next few years constitutes the other. There is needed a new, open minded evalua- tion of the potentials within our grasp and a willingness to join in a united effort to capture and maintain for our church that which a re- juvenated and effectively run Montreat College has to offer. What to many may seem to be an immediate tragedy can yet become a great challenge to our church. L. N. B. More on Morality Mr. Oren D. Pritchard (our good neighbor) , the President of the National Association of Life Underwriters, has just released some in- teresting figures. For every dollar spent on charity the better known local, private groups must collect one dollar and seven cents. To spend a similar dol- lar a municipality must collect a dollar twenty seven. On the state level this overhead rises from twenty seven cents to one dollar. The state must collect two dollars for every one spent on charity. But the government must collect three dollars for every one dollar that the receipient gets. Near Indianapolis a business man bought a small acreage. It had not been farmed for some time. For promising not to raise corn on it, he is paid twenty five dollars an acre. Sensing his advantage, he now rents extra acres from a less intelligent man for twelve dollars a year, and receives twenty five dollars from the gov- ernment for doing nothing with them. Another gentleman was approaching sixty- five. He knew he would be forced to retire. But his boss said, Don't retire; let me fire you. Then you can collect twenty-six weeks of un- employment benefits and get your pension too. The force that is disintegrating the United States is not inflation. That is only a symptom. Nor is it Khrushchev. Some spunk could take care of him. The eroding evil of our land is the immorality of the people. Honesty has been discarded. False ideals have been accepted. And the results are raids on the public treasury, the cheapening of our money, legal privileges granted to pressure groups, the inability of the courts to deal with communist infiltration, and all the drunkenness and adultery that goes on with the law's approval. One thing that our country needs is a good dose of Christian moral standards. G. H. C. Shall the Gospel Be Modified To Suit the Intelligentsia? This is the aim of sundry theologians or phil- osophers of religion today, as yesterday. Is the prominent preacher or scholar a religious vir- tuoso able to take the score and adapt it as seems to him best to suit the whims of the cur- rent audience? Or was Browning nearer right when he described the ancient disciple as com- missioned to set down naught but the given word, with nothing left to "any arbitrament" to choose or change? There have been two movements in the his- tory of Christian thought. In ancient Alex- andria, Clement and Origen sought to synthe- size Platonism and the Christian faith. Near the other end of the Mediterranean, Tertullian objected: what fellowship has Athens with Jerusalem, the school of earth with the school of heaven? The one is the movement of syn- thesis, the other that of diastasis. Thomas Aquinas sought to unite Augustine and Aris- totle; Luther to free Christian education from the domination of "that mad pagan Aristotle." When our Lord travelled through the cities of Galilee with His matchless invitation "Come unto ME", the wise and the sophisticated re- jected Him, but the Father revealed Him unto babes. In the Church in Corinth there were not many wise, not many mighty, not many noble. For in the wisdom of God it pleased God that the world by its wisdom should not know God. In other words neither Jesus nor Paul kow-towed to the intellectualism of their day. And the reason that neither conformed to the demands of the high brows was that the Gospel was of Divine revelation. The Southern Presbyterian Journal, a Presbyterian meekly magazine, devoted to the statement, defense, and propagation of the Gospel, the faith which was once for all delivered unto the saints, published every Wednesday by the Southern Presbyterian Journal, Inc., in Weaverville, N. C. Second-Class mail privileges authorized at Weaverville, N. C. Vol. XVIII, No. 5, June 3, 1959. Editorial and Business Offices: Weaverville, N. C. Address Change: When changing address, please let us have both old and new address as far in advance as possible. Allow three weeks after change if not sent in advance. When possible, send an address label giving your old address. JUNE 3. 1959 PAGE 3

description

More on Morality

Transcript of CLARK, Gordon H. More on Morality - The Southern Presbyterian Journal 18

  • educational needs o hundreds of young people

    and at the same time have these young peoplechanneled into service within the church, both

    at home and abroad.

    This opportunity should prove a challenge

    to the Trustees when they meet in Montreatin August. The immediate church-wide needfor additional workers constitutes one part of

    this challenge. The fact that candidates for acollege education will double in the next few

    years constitutes the other.

    There is needed a new, open minded evalua-tion of the potentials within our grasp and awillingness to join in a united effort to capture

    and maintain for our church that which a re-juvenated and effectively run Montreat Collegehas to offer.

    What to many may seem to be an immediatetragedy can yet become a great challenge toour church.

    L. N. B.

    More on MoralityMr. Oren D. Pritchard (our good neighbor)

    ,

    the President of the National Association ofLife Underwriters, has just released some in-teresting figures.

    For every dollar spent on charity the betterknown local, private groups must collect onedollar and seven cents. To spend a similar dol-lar a municipality must collect a dollar twentyseven. On the state level this overhead rises fromtwenty seven cents to one dollar. The statemust collect two dollars for every one spent oncharity. But the government must collect threedollars for every one dollar that the receipientgets.

    Near Indianapolis a business man bought asmall acreage. It had not been farmed for sometime. For promising not to raise corn on it,he is paid twenty five dollars an acre. Sensinghis advantage, he now rents extra acres from aless intelligent man for twelve dollars a year,and receives twenty five dollars from the gov-ernment for doing nothing with them.

    Another gentleman was approaching sixty-five. He knew he would be forced to retire.But his boss said, Don't retire; let me fire you.Then you can collect twenty-six weeks of un-employment benefits and get your pension too.

    The force that is disintegrating the UnitedStates is not inflation. That is only a symptom.Nor is it Khrushchev. Some spunk could takecare of him. The eroding evil of our land isthe immorality of the people. Honesty has

    been discarded. False ideals have been accepted.

    And the results are raids on the public treasury,the cheapening of our money, legal privileges

    granted to pressure groups, the inability of the

    courts to deal with communist infiltration, andall the drunkenness and adultery that goes onwith the law's approval.

    One thing that our country needs is a gooddose of Christian moral standards.

    G. H. C.

    Shall the Gospel Be ModifiedTo Suit the Intelligentsia?

    This is the aim of sundry theologians or phil-osophers of religion today, as yesterday. Is the

    prominent preacher or scholar a religious vir-tuoso able to take the score and adapt it asseems to him best to suit the whims of the cur-rent audience? Or was Browning nearer rightwhen he described the ancient disciple as com-missioned to set down naught but the givenword, with nothing left to "any arbitrament"

    to choose or change?

    There have been two movements in the his-tory of Christian thought. In ancient Alex-

    andria, Clement and Origen sought to synthe-size Platonism and the Christian faith. Nearthe other end of the Mediterranean, Tertullianobjected: what fellowship has Athens withJerusalem, the school of earth with the school

    of heaven? The one is the movement of syn-thesis, the other that of diastasis. ThomasAquinas sought to unite Augustine and Aris-totle; Luther to free Christian education fromthe domination of "that mad pagan Aristotle."

    When our Lord travelled through the citiesof Galilee with His matchless invitation "Comeunto ME", the wise and the sophisticated re-jected Him, but the Father revealed Him untobabes. In the Church in Corinth there werenot many wise, not many mighty, not manynoble. For in the wisdom of God it pleased Godthat the world by its wisdom should not knowGod. In other words neither Jesus nor Paulkow-towed to the intellectualism of their day.And the reason that neither conformed to thedemands of the high brows was that the Gospelwas of Divine revelation.

    The Southern Presbyterian Journal, a Presbyterian meekly magazine, devoted to the statement, defense, and propagation of theGospel, the faith which was once for all delivered unto the saints, published every Wednesday by the Southern Presbyterian Journal,Inc., in Weaverville, N. C.

    Second-Class mail privileges authorized at Weaverville, N. C. Vol. XVIII, No. 5, June 3, 1959. Editorial and Business Offices:Weaverville, N. C.

    Address Change: When changing address, please let us have both old and new address as far in advance as possible. Allow threeweeks after change if not sent in advance. When possible, send an address label giving your old address.

    JUNE 3. 1959 PAGE 3